Kirstin Innes has written a fat, firecracker of a book, revolving around the suicide of Clio Campbell, a Glasgow chanteuse, whose story emerges through the voices of friends, acquaintances, enemies and journalists with space to fill. It's about women and silence, oddballs and adventurers and stupid mistakes; about 'no need to worry about me'
Scottishness and 'getting by' as practised by every culture on earth. Best of all, it's about joy and hope and the pressing need to seize the day while one can.' Janice Galloway, author of The Trick Is to Keep Breathing